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Chart Of The Day: Savings Rate Drops To December 2007 Levels

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Wondering how it was possible for Q3 GDP to post such a substantial beat yesterday driven by a surge in Personal Consumption expenditures? Wonder no more: in the last quarter, the US consumer literally tapped out, bringing their savings rate from a 2011 high 5.3% in June to 3.6% in September, after the BEA reported that while spending increase was in line with expectations at an unsustainable 0.6%, income was just barely above unchanged at 0.1% on expectations of 0.3% confirming that as far as the economy is concerned, the consumer is just getting worse and worse off.

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Citi Explains Why The Time To Fade The EUR Rally Has Come

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Yesterday the short squeeze in the EURUSD brought the pair to within pips of Citigroup's revised stop loss of 1.4260 even as it got even more bearish on the European currency, setting a new target of 1.3150. Today the bank's FX strategists continue their onslaught, stating in a note that wonders how long the Euro-love will last that "The post-summit EUR rally is driven by a continuing squeeze in short risk positions and unwinding of worst fears of financial contagion, rather than improvement in cyclical fundamentals." Here are their full thoughts on why the time to short the pair, and thus the entire EURUSD-driven market, lower.

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Felix Zulauf: The Die is Cast

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•We are on a spiral caused by mass credit creation, excessive borrowing, reckless spending, and a enormous credit crisis. The end result is inevitable, and most likely unavoidable.
• The Europeans have created their own credit crisis, and it is attributable, in part, to the creation of the EU. They EU is following a path similar to what the US went through n 2008-09.
• There will be yet another bailout in the US and QE3 (or more) — but not until the situation gets much worse; That refers to both the market and the economy.

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Last Updated ( Friday, 28 October 2011 06:39 )
 

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - A Possible Breakout on Debt Monetization in Europe

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The 'gut check' in metals was very short-lived, as the precious metals rallied with the melt up in financial assets on the debt monetization plans out of Europe to save their banks.   It was 'risk on.'

What next? We may have some follow on, but continued upside depends on additional QE3 from the Fed, as well as the actions by all the world's central banks to monetize the private banking debt and inflate their currencies.

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Frontrunning: October 28

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  • Sarkozy Sees More Budget Cuts to Save France’s AAA Rating as Growth Slows (Bloomberg)
  • EU Crisis Deal Buys Time for Greece: Papandreou (Bloomberg)
  • California Proposes to Curtail Workers’ Benefits (WSJ)
  • FINRA brokerage oversight group misled regulators, SEC charges (WaPo)
  • Greece Will Leave Euro Even With Pact: Rogoff (Bloomberg)
  • Italian banks cool to demand for more capital (FT)
  • EU Crisis Resolution Critical to Obama 2012 Bid (Bloomberg)
  • Yen Record After BOJ Move May Encourage Japan to Aid Europe (Bloomberg)
  • China on ‘Bigger, Faster Treadmill’: Chanos (Bloomberg)
  • Mayor tells EU to drop financial tax (FT)
  • China's inflation will continue to ease: official (Xinhua)
  • China eyes creation of ASEAN Bank (Reuters)

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China Could Play Key Role in EU Rescue

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China is very likely to contribute to the eurozone’s bail-out fund but the scope of its involvement will depend on European leaders satisfying some key conditions, two senior advisers to the Chinese government have told the Financial Times.

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S&P 500 Extends Best Month Since ’74, Euro Rises

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Stocks surged, extending the biggest monthly rally for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index since 1974, and the euro strengthened as European leaders agreed to expand a bailout fund to stem the region’s debt crisis. Treasuries sank, while metals and oil led a rally in commodities.

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Euro Bailout Cracks Emerge; Greece "Just Says No"

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When reporting on the announcement of the math-free deus ex machina bail out that was announced last night, which nobody still has any grasp over, but it had a "trillion" in there somewhere so that alone sent the market scurrying, we suggested that it would take about 24-48 hours for reality to start settling in.  It may have been considerably less. As the Telegraph reports, "A trillion euro bail-out to save the EU’s single currency is in danger of unraveling after Germany’s central bank warned that the rescue measure was too dependent on the high-risk deals that caused the economic crisis."

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Last Updated ( Friday, 28 October 2011 06:13 )
 

Links FYI

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GP viewers also  FYI many of the articles  we posted  are from the sites listed  on right hands side of  Home page under the big boxes Pls make note


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The Devil In The Details (FT)

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GP- Look for reality to sink in next week.

For many analysts combing over the three-part deal to restore confidence in the eurozone, the most important things were not what was in the agreement – but what was left out.

On almost every major issue, particularly the second €130bn Greek bail-out and increasing the firepower of the eurozone’s €440bn rescue fund, it could be days or weeks before the details that underpin the entire package are finally ironed out.

“More than we had expected … has been left to be finalised and detailed over the next month,” Malcolm Barr of JPMorgan wrote. “There is plenty of room to doubt whether each of the key aspects of the package will deliver.”

Potentially the most uncertain element is the deal struck with Greek bondholders for them to take a 50 per cent cut in the face value of their bonds.

Not only is the reduction in Greece’s debt dependent on almost all current bondholders participating in the plan, but the actual bond-swap which will produce the savings has not even begun to be negotiated.

“Here’s where you may be a little bit surprised, but this is where we decided to end last night,” said Charles Dallara, chief negotiator for the private bondholders.

Because the Greek deal has not been completed, the size of the newly beefed-up rescue fund cannot be exactly calculated.

The €1,000bn that has been touted for the fund’s size is, as a result, a guesstimate based on the still-untested ability to multiply a still-unknown asset base by four to five times. “This is an approximate value,” acknowledged Angela Merkel, the German chancellor. “We don’t know yet how this works.”

Bond swap programmes will be key to next phase

One of the consequences of clinching a last-minute deal in the early hours, such as Thursday morning’s agreement between Greek bondholders and European governments, is that much of what is needed has not yet been finalised.

The headline figure of a 50 per cent cut in the face value of Greek bonds has drawn the most attention – but just how that is to be achieved remains unclear.

The details are critical. Depending on how the programme is set up, bondholders could end up with something significantly less onerous than leaders touted on Thursday morning.

“While this approach has a better structure and bigger haircuts than the terrible July deal, it does not go far enough and may yet be undermined, as most details remain to be agreed,” said Sony Kapoor, head of Re-Define, the economic consultancy.

The centre of the next, critical phase of negotiations – expected to resume within the coming days – will be over a bond swap programme, which must be completed by January.

 

Officials said that at its most basic the Greek haircuts will work like this: someone owning a €100 bond will trade it for a bond with a face value of €50. But the real value of the new bonds will be highly dependent on their annual interest rates – or so-called “coupons”– and how long it takes for the €50 to be paid back – known as maturities.

By adjusting coupons and maturities and taking into account other “sweeteners” already agreed by European officials – such as the €30bn ($42bn) in collateral they will provide to back the new bonds – the pain on bondholders could be lessened considerably.

“Here’s where you may be a little bit surprised, but this is where we decided to end last night: the specific elements of the deal, that is to say the structure of the new claim on Greece, remains to be negotiated,” said Charles Dallara, managing director of the Institute of International Finance, the consortium of banks that negotiated on behalf of Greek bondholders.

One economist who has advised European governments estimated that the net present value of the new bonds – the measure of what they are worth when the coupons and maturities are taken into consideration – could come close to bonds that were supposed to be offered after July’s aborted Greek bail-out. Those bonds were estimated to have just a 21 per cent reduction in net present value.

By cutting in half the face value of the estimated €200bn in Greek bonds in private hands, officials have taken a far more aggressive stance in reducing Greece’s overall debt levels than they did three months ago, a move long called for by outside analysts. But such swingeing cuts are also dependent on almost all Greek bondholders agreeing to participate in the plan. Unlike the July deal, which set a target at 90 per cent participation, Thursday’s plan includes no such target.

In addition, by taking such big up-front haircuts, European officials threaten the very solvency of the largest single holders of Greek debt – Greek banks, which hold about €50bn in sovereign Greek bonds. A senior EU official said €30bn of the new €130bn rescue package must go to bailing out Greek banks – a €10bn increase from July.

Negotiations over the bond swaps could prove the trickiest part of the deal as it moves forward. Senior European officials believe that, because they have committed bondholders to bringing down Greek debt to 120 per cent of gross domestic product, banks and other investors in Greek bonds will have little wiggle room. “That basically limits the room for manoeuvre for coupons and maturities,” said another senior EU official.

But negotiators for bondholders clearly feel differently. Mr Dallara said that when he presented the deal to the IIF’s member financial institutions they would be satisfied the reduction in new bonds’ net present value would not be overly onerous. “That is very crucial to us and we feel confident we protected our interest in containing the net present value loss.

“We have done multiple options of coupons and constructions built around this €30bn package and we feel confident that . . . we can reach agreement on the particulars that protect the [net present value] loss.”


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The Banks Have Volunteered (at Gunpoint) To Get 50% of Their Money Taken - No Credit Event???

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picsay-1319726495

So,
the European joke has come full circle. Indebted nations borrow more
money to bail out other indebted nations who ask insolvent banks to cut a
50% off deal on the loans that were given to them, but the insolvent
banks will then have to raise capital which the will of course borrow
from the over-indebted nations whom they just gave money to. Get it?
Problem solved -

The rally is
based off of bs and an inability to count. After the voluntary
haircut (volunteered at gunpoint, may I add), Greece will still have
roughly 120% debt to GDP ratio with a declining economy. Unsustainable still. I would fade this rally with careful stops.

I
have went over the Greek debt tragedy in detail with subscribers and
things are unfolding exactly as I had anticipated. Before we get to the
Greek default rehash, let's peruse an email I received from one of my
many astute BoomBustBloggers.

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 27 October 2011 13:46 )
 
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